Generator of Art
The Russian avant-garde of the twentieth century is a unique phenomenon not only in Russia, but in the world culture. The amazing creative energy accumulated by the artists of this golden age is still providing nourishment for artistic culture today and all who have dealings with the art produced by Russian Art Nouveau. Alexander Rodchenko was indisputably one of the main generators of creative ideas and incarnated the spiritual aura of the age. Painting, design, theatre, cinema, typography and photography, all areas covered by the powerful talent of this strong, handsome man, were transformed, opening up radically new paths of development.
The early 1920s was an “intermediate age”, to quote Viktor Shklovsky, one of the finest critics and theoreticians of the day, a period when, albeit briefly, illusively, there was a resonance between artistic and social experiment. It was at this time, 1924, that Alexander Rodchenko started photography, already a well-known artist with the slogan “Our duty is to experiment” placed firmly at the centre of his aesthetic. The result of this was a fundamental change of ideas about the nature of photography and the role of the photographer. Conceptual thinking was introduced into photography. Instead of just being the reflection of reality, photography also became a device for the visual representation of dynamic intellectual constructions.
Rodchenko introduced Constructivist ideology into photography and developed methods and instruments for applying it. The devices discovered by him spread rapidly. They were used by pupils and like-minded practitioners, as well as aesthetic and political adversaries. The use of the “Rodchenko method”, which included the diagonal composition, discovered by him, as well as foreshortening and other devices, did not automatically guarantee the artistic dimension of a work, however. The practice of Rodchenko the photographer was confused not only and not so much by the formal devices for which he was so mercilessly criticised in the late twenties, as by the profound inner romanticism characteristic to his work even in his student years. Suffice it to recall the make-believe letters he wrote to Varvara Stepanova in the early years after they met. This romantic element, embedded in the childhood which he spent back-stage in the theatre where his father worked, was transformed into the powerful utopian thinking of Rodchenko the Constructivist, who believed in the possibility of a positive transfiguration of the world and of mankind.
In the 1920s in each new photographic series Rodchenko set new tasks and produced manifestoes on what photography and life would be like after they had been transformed by the Constructivist artistic principle. In the 1930s, particularly towards the end, exhausted by criticism and persecution, he tried to analyse life and artistic practice, his own included, the evolution of which was determined largely by the developing aesthetics of socialist realism. Incidentally, in the whole history of Russian photography of the first half of the twentieth century Alexander Rodchenko is the only person who, thanks to his printed articles and diaries, left unique records, artistic reflections of a photographer-thinker who witnessed historical cataclysms, which generated within him a tragic conflict and the unconscious drive to create.
Tired of the constant revolutionary transformations that produced a reality far from the ideals which had inspired his early period of creativity, he wrote in his diary on 12 February 1943: “Art is at the service of the people, but the people are being led goodness knows where. I want to lead the people to art, not use art to lead them somewhere. Was I born too early or too late? Art must be separate from politics …”
In the final years of his life, betrayed by friends and pupils, deprived of the right to work and earn his living taking part in exhibitions, expelled from the Union of Artists, and in very poor health, Alexander Rodchenko was nevertheless a very fortunate man. He had a family: his friend and comrade-in-arms Varvara Stepanova, his daughter Varvara Rodchenko, her husband Nikolai Lavrentiev, his grandson Alexander Lavrentiev and his family, a small, but very close-knit clan charged with creative energy. If it had not been for this Russian family first photographic museum, the Moscow House of Photography, might never have happened. In Rodchenko’s house, together with the Rodchenko family, we have discovered and studied the history of Russian photography, which would be unthinkable without Alexander Mikhailovich Rodchenko.
Olga Sviblova
EXHIBITION
Alexander Rodchenko
From the collection of Multimedia art Museum, Moscow
from 27th of February – 8th of May 2016
Curator : Olga Sviblova, Director of Multimedia Art Museum, Moscow
LAC Lugano Arte e Cultura
Piazza Bernardino Luini 6
6900 Lugano
Switzerland
http://www.luganolac.ch
http://www.mamm-mdf.ru